This document summarizes innovative approaches to securing land tenure for the urban poor in the Philippines. It discusses three key approaches: the Community Mortgage Program (CMP), presidential land proclamations, and the usufruct arrangement. The CMP allows urban poor communities to take out loans to purchase land collectively. Presidential land proclamations involve the president declaring land as available for socialized housing, which then allows informal settlers to formalize their claims. Usufruct arrangements grant communities rights to occupy and use land for a period of time. The report analyzes each approach, describing their legal and institutional frameworks, how they have been implemented, and their benefits and challenges. It aims to document lessons learned that could help institutionalize alternative
Suplemen HUD Magz Edisi 5 /2015. Kota BATAM Menyongsong MEA 2015
Innovative Urban Tenure in the Philippines. Challenges, Approaches and Instituonalization. Summary Report
1. REPORT 5 / 2012
Philippines
Innovative Urban Tenure
in the Philippines Challenges,
approaches and
summary report
institutionalization
Securing land and property rights for all
3. Innovative Urban Tenure
in the Philippines Challenges,
approaches and
summary report institutionalization
I
4. contents
Acronyms and Abbreviations IV
Foreword V
Executive summary VI
PART I. Analysis of Secure Tenure Practices 1-12
Chapter 1: Land and tenure approaches 2-5
1.1 Tenure approaches in the context of global trends 2
1.2 Land and tenure issues and the Philippine urban poor 3-5
Chapter 2: Legal and institutional framework 6-12
2.1 The role of public and private institutions 6-7
2.2 Capacities of stakeholders 7-10
2.3 Legal framework 10-12
PART II. IMPLEMENTING ALTERNATIVE TENURE APPROACHES 13-35
Chapter 3: The Community Mortgage Programme 14-19
3.1 Features of the approach 14-15
3.2 Specific application in two cases 16-17
3.3 Legal, institutional and governance framework 18
3.4 People’s perceptions of their acquired security of tenure 18
3.5 The benefits and limitations of the tenure approach 19
Chapter 4: Presidential Proclamation 20-29
4.1 Features of the approach 20
4.2 Specific application of land proclamations 20-25
4.3 Legal, institutional and governance framework 25-27
4.4 People’s perceptions of their acquired security of tenure 27
4.5 The benefits and limitations of the tenure approach 28-29
Chapter 5: Usufruct 30-35
5.1 Features of the approach 30
5.2 Two cases where usufruct has been used 30-33
5.3 Legal, institutional and governance framework 33-34
5.4 People’s perceptions of their acquired security of tenure 34-35
5.5 The benefits and limitations of the tenure approach 35
II
5. PART III. INSTITUTIONALIZING ALTERNATIVE TENURE APPROACHES 36-52
Chapter 6: Findings and conclusions 37-48
6.1 Benefits of institutionalizing alternative secure tenure approaches 37-38
6.2 What approaches have worked? 39-44
6.3 What are the constraints? 45
6.4 Continuing challenges 45-46
6.5 Overcoming legal barriers to land access 47
6.6. Overcoming institutional and governance barriers 47-48
6.7. Oportunities for financing secure tenure 48
Chapter 7: Ways Forward – Prospects and challenges of institutionalization 49-52
7.1 Integrate and codify processes and steps for securing tenure in existing laws. 49-50
7.2 Develop intermediate tenure instruments and schemes 50
7.3 Procedures for acquiring formal tenure 50-51
7.4 Integrate secure tenure approaches in city development 52
7.5 City-wide land inventories and enumerations 52
7.6 Develop financing schemes for tenure regularization 52
7.7 Strengthen community organizations 52
References 53-54
List of tables
Table 1. Estimated housing need, 2005-2010 4
Table 2. Magnitude of informal settlers in Metro Manila by category 5
Table 3. Housing Targets, 2005-2010 5
Table 4. Benefits of institutionalizing alternative tenure approaches 38
Table 5. Roles and responsibilities of different institutional actors under 40-41
three secure tenure approaches
the
List of boxes
Box 1. Stages in acquiring a CMP loan 15
Box 2. A local government utilizes CMP for the city-wide tenure regularization of slum communities 17
Box 3. Community organizations help collect useful information and protect the rights of 22
disadvantaged members
Box 4. Issues that can hamper the disposition of “proclaimed land” 23
Box 5. The necessity and uses of intermediate tenure instruments 25
Box 6. A successful presidential proclamation 29
Box 7. Terms and institutional arrangements in a medium-rise housing project on land under usufruct 30
Box 8. Innovating resettlement practice through usufruct 33
Box 9. Roles of Community Associations 43
Box 10. Institutionalizing public-private partnerships 44
Box 11. How providing secure tenure through presidential land proclamations could be institutionalized 51
Exchange Rate (As of September 2012): 1 United States Dollar (USD) = 41.1 Philippine Pesos (PHP)
III
6. ACRONYMS/ABBREVIATIONS
ADB Asian Development Bank NCR National Capital Region
APD Area for Priority Development NSCB National Statistical Coordination
BIR Bureau of Internal Revenue Board
CELA Certificate of Entitlement to a Lot NGC National Government Centre
Allocation NGCHC National Government Centre
CLA Certificate of Lot Award Housing Committee
CMP Community Mortgage Program NGO Non-government organization
CTR Certificate of Title Reservation NHA National Housing Authority
DENR Department of Environment and NHMFC National Home Mortgage Finance
Natural Resources Corporation
DPWH Department of Public Works and PBSP Philippine Business for Social
Highways Progress
EO Executive Order PCL Purchase Commitment Line
FTI Food Terminal Incorporated PCUP Presidential Commission for the
GK Gawad Kalinga (literal translation – Urban Poor
“provision of care”) PHILSSA Partnership of Philippine Support
GSHAI Golden Shower Homeowners’ Service Agencies
Association Inc. PHP Philippine pesos
GSIS Government Service Insurance PIAC Project Inter-Agency Committee
System RA Republic Act
HDMF Home Development Mutual Fund or SHFC Social Housing Finance Corporation
Pag-IBIG STEP-UP Strategic Private Sector Partnership
HFHP Habitat for Humanity Philippines for Urban Poverty Reduction
HGC Home Guaranty Corporation UDHA Urban Development and Housing Act
HOA Homeowners’ Association ULAP Ugnayang Lakas ng mga Apektadong
HUDCC Housing and Urban Development Pamilya sa Baybaying Ilog
Coordinating Council Pasig (translated: United Forces of
JFPR Japan Fund for Poverty Reduction Affected Families along Pasig River)
LGU Local Government Unit ULRTF Urban Land Reform Task Force
LHB Local Housing Board UPA Urban Poor Associates
LIAC Local Inter-agency Committee UPAO Urban Poor Affairs Office
LOG Letter of Guaranty UP-ALL Urban Poor Alliance
MRI Mortgage Redemption Insurance UPSURGE Urban Partnership for Sustainable
MTPDP Medium Term Philippine Upliftment, Renewal, Governance,
Development Plan and Empowerment
NATCCO National Confederation of VMSDFI Vincentian Missionaries Social
Cooperatives Development Foundation, Inc.
IV
7. FOreword
One of the most serious areas: the Community Mortgage Programme,
problems of urbanisation Presidential Proclamations, and the use of usufruct
in the Philippines is the agreements.
lack of tenure security.
In a country where it is projected that 70 per cent of At their Rio de Janeiro summit in June 2012, world
the population will be living in towns and cities in the leaders placed the urban challenge high on the
next decade, achieving security of land tenure will be global agenda. In endorsing the outcome document,
a complex and costly process, especially for the poor. The future we want, they recognised the need
to strengthen existing cooperation mechanisms,
The problem is especially acute in the capital, Metro partnerships and agreements for concrete, global
Manila, where according to the National Housing implementation of the Habitat Agenda for sustainable
Authority the slum population stands at some urban development.
2.7 million people.
In the Philippines, this means that the urban future
This publication shows how the broader land we all want can come from their call for an integrated
community now recognises that various types of approach to planning and building sustainable cities,
tenure security exist along a continuum of land rights. better support for local authorities, better public
It also shows how different strategies may be used to awareness and involvement, especially of the poor, in
secure each type. the decision making. This approach was reaffirmed at
the Sixth session of the World Urban Forum in Naples
It is generally agreed that while full tenure security in September 2012.
may be the goal, there are other immediate objectives.
These include protection from eviction, access to UN-Habitat, the Global Land Tool Network and
services and different types of tenure which are their partners are committed to sharing resources,
achievable in the short term. increasing capacity and focusing on solutions to
achieve those collective aims.
Problems like security of tenure need creativity and
innovative thinking if we are to go beyond a status I believe this publication is an important contribution
quo which blocks progress and makes little provision to these aspirations.
for the poor.
In the Philippines, a system for dealing with housing
and tenure has been developed. There are some
innovative strategies for implementing alternative Dr. Joan Clos,
tenure approaches from which other communities Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations,
can learn. This publication focuses on three important Executive Director UN-Habitat.
V
8. Executive summary
In many poor and developing countries, land markets, The publication also underscores the advantages of
prevailing policies, practices and institutions limit designing and implementing simple, intermediate
many of the working poor’s access to secure tenure tenure instruments for providing the urban poor with
and adequate land for housing. The Philippines is one access to land at different levels. While the study
such country, where patterns of urban growth and acknowledges the successful implementation of
development make it difficult for the poor to remain in these approaches, it also recognizes that there are
the cities where employment and other opportunities continuing challenges associated with implementing
exist. such alternative approaches. Finally, the publication
suggests ways toward institutionalizing alternative
Given the size of the urban poor population, a secure tenure approaches.
major challenge confronting development agencies,
policymakers and social actors concerned with
addressing poverty is how to provide better access
to secure tenure and housing. Tools and strategies to
increase the poor’s access to secure land and housing
tenure need to be devised. The overall aim of this study
is to contribute to the crafting of these alternative tools
and strategies.
This publication is a summary report of a study
published in 2011 (see www.gltn.net). It documents
and culls lessons from the Philippines’ experience
in implementing alternative approaches to
securing tenure for the urban poor, specifically the
Community Mortgage Program (CMP), presidential
land proclamations and the usufruct arrangement.
It provides a description of these three approaches,
including the objectives, legal and institutional
arrangements, key challenges and outcomes and
relevant processes.
VI
10. PART I Analysis of Secure Tenure Practices
CHAPTER 1: LAND AND TENURE Other approaches have sought to formalize previously
APPROACHES informal types of tenure through institutionalized
land and housing programmes for the poor. The
1.1. Tenure approaches in the context massive programme Organismo de la Formalizacion
of global trends de la Propriedad Informal in Peru was one ambitious
attempt to implement titling on a large scale through
The innovative tenure approaches that are the subject the formal registration of non-registered lands and the
of this publication, namely the Community Mortgage registration of vacant, untitled, government-owned
Program (CMP), presidential land proclamations, and lands adjacent to urban areas (ibid). In Argentina, the
the usufruct arrangement, have occurred alongside physical and legal regularization of informal settlements
similar developments in other countries. was the objective of the Programa de Mejoramiento de
Barrios Settlement Upgrading Programme implemented
Around the world, the central role played by land in 21 provinces (Almansi, 2009).
rights and the provision of secure tenure, particularly
in increasing access to improved housing, is The development of intermediate tenure instruments
increasingly recognised. As a result, the conventional has become a practical and effective strategy for
and static emphasis on ownership and individual titling providing some degree of tenure and shelter security
has given way to an understanding of land rights as a and improved access to basic urban services. As
continuum with varying degrees of land and housing Wehrmann and Antonio (2011) pointed out,
security. (UN-Habitat, 2008). intermediate tenure instruments are generally easier to
access, less cumbersome, faster and more affordable,
This new understanding has led to the exploration and than conventional methods.
expansion of the application of various types of non-
formal tenure, including customary tenure. Combining Brazil’s tenure policy is based on the principle that the
customary and statutory tenure was an approach recognition of housing rights should not be based on
tried in Benin for example, where it enabled poor ownership. The country’s Concession of the Real Right
households to build housing in areas under customary to Use (CRRU) has been applied in the regularization
ownership. Customary rights can be registered at a of favelas in public areas. The tenure regularization
lower cost, as shown in Ethiopia, Mozambique and programmes in Porto Alegre and Recife do not, in
Benin (ibid). In Ghana, customary land secretariats fact, favour the privatization of public land because
record land rights, undertake land surveys to mark out doing so could undermine the objective of tenure
development plots, collect rents, draw up land leases regularization (Fernandes, 2002). Finally, in Bogota,
and facilitate their registration. In Bolivia, the largely Colombia, a variety of intermediate tenure instruments
informal arrangement known as the anticretico system has made it possible for residents of illegally built
has enabled poor families to rent affordable housing. subdivisions to demand services and the improvement
of their living conditions, even without owning formal
titles to the land (Aristizabal and Gomez, 2002).
2
12. PART I Analysis of Secure Tenure Practices
1.2.3. Urban poor access to land land information and management, and institutional
development and capacity building (Barcena, 2010).
Urban land conversion and development have
been mainly private sector-led. As a consequence 1.2.5. Secure tenure and housing
of the complicated and lengthy legal processes
involved in securing tenure, a dynamic informal land The Government’s “National Shelter Programme” has
market thrives. The system, largely run by squatting been designed primarily to address the need of urban
syndicates, operates by exchanging “land rights” or informal settlers. Its targets are measured in “shelter
the right to use land without the benefit of a formal security units” (SSUs) to underscore the fact that its
document or process. goal is to provide security of tenure.
1.2.4. Land administration and management According to the Medium Term Philippine
Development Plan (MTPDP) for 2005-2010, the
A dual system of land titling exists in the Philippines projected housing need for that period was 3.7
– administrative and judicial. It is claimed that million units (Partnership of Philippine Support Service
the inefficiency of the land administration system Agencies, 2009). Of this number, around 1.2 million,
contributes to the inefficiency of the land market or 31 per cent, comprise what is termed the “housing
(Antonio, 2006) leading to high transaction costs backlog” or the unmet need for housing in previous
to register and transfer lands, difficulty in obtaining years. The MTPDP aimed to deliver 1.14 million
land records and information, and susceptibility to SSUs for 2005-2010, less than a third of the number
corruption. There have been initiatives to reform needed for the same period, implying that the private
the system that focus on land administration, public sector was expected to cover the balance.
land management, property valuation and taxation,
Table 1: Estimated housing need, 2005-2010
Category Units
Housing backlog as of 2005 1,170,800
Doubled-up housing 387,315
Replacement/informal settlers 588,853
Homeless 8,298
Substandard (needs upgrading) 186,334
New households (due to population growth 2005-2010) 2,585,272
Total 3,756,072
Source: HUDCC, Medium Term Philippine Development Plan 2005-2010
4
13. CH1: Land and tenure approaches
01
Metro Manila has the highest concentration of informal settlers who live on privately owned lands,
government land and in danger areas.
Table 2: Magnitude of informal settlers in Metro Manila by category
Classification Number of households Percentage
Danger areas 107,997 19.83%
Areas earmarked for government infrastructure 35,198 6.46%
Government owned lands 179,653 32.99%
Privately owned lands 219,457 40.30%
Areas for priority development (APDs) 2,304 0.42%
Total 544,609 100%
Source: NHA, as of September 2007
Of the 1.1 million shelter security units the Government planned to deliver, 68 per cent were
“socialized housing”, or low-priced housing for the bottom 40 per cent of the population
Table 3: Housing targets, 2005-2010
Housing package Number of units Percentage share
Socialized (below PHP 225,000) 780,191 68.1%
Low Cost (PHP 225,000 – PHP 2 million) 365,282 31.8%
Medium (PHP 2 million – PHP 4 million) 195 0.01%
Total 1,145,668 100.0%
Source: HUDCC, Medium-Term Philippine Development Plan 2005-2010
Three programmes – resettlement, Community Mortgage Programme and presidential proclamation
– account for 54 per cent of the total socialized housing target for 2005-2010, and aim primarily
to provide secure tenure to urban informal settlers. Figures also suggest that, as far as national
government programmes are concerned, there has been increasing support for on-site tenure
regularization.
5
14. PART I Analysis of Secure Tenure Practices
CHAPTER 2: THE LEGAL AND INSTITUTIONAL 2.1.2. Local government units
FRAMEWORK
LGUs are also key stakeholders in the provision
2.1. The role of public and private of socialized and low-cost housing. The Urban
institutions Development and Housing Act (UDHA) gave local
governments the primary responsibility of providing
The Government and the private sector deliver housing services to “underprivileged and homeless
housing services with the participation of several citizens”.
public and private institutions, categorized as follows.
An Executive Order issued in 2008 instructed cities
2.1.1. The housing bureaucracy to create local housing boards (LHBs),1 principally
to oversee and regulate the implementation of
• The Housing and Urban Development Coordinating informal settler eviction to ensure compliance with
Council (HUDCC) heads the country’s housing the UDHA.2 The LHBs’ broad mandate is to address
bureaucracy and is the highest policy-making and shelter concerns, monitor the provision of housing
coordinating government office on shelter. and resettlement areas, and observe procedures and
• The National Housing Authority (NHA) liaises with requirements during evictions and demolitions of
local government units to implement resettlement underprivileged city residents’ houses.
programmes.
• The Home Development Mutual Fund, also known Some local government units have set up Urban Poor
as the Pag-IBIG Fund, provides financing for Affairs Offices (UPAOs) directly under the Office of
salaried and self-employed workers. the Mayor, to serve as main policy implementers.
• The National Home Mortgage Finance Corporation Representatives of UPAOs also sit as members of the
(NHMFC) uses long-term funds provided by LHB. The UPAOs enforce the policies drawn by the
lending institutions to purchase mortgages LHBs.
offered by private and public institutions. The
NHMFC administers programmes catering to International development agencies view local
poor and low-income families, namely the Abot- government units as partners in their urban reform
Kaya Pabahay Fund and the CMP. efforts.
• he Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board
T
(HLURB) plans and regulates land use and 2.1.3. Housing finance institutions
development, enforces subdivision and land use
standards, and encourages greater private sector • ome Development Mutual Fund (HDMF), or
H
participation in low-cost housing. The Government Pag-IBIG, funds the Local Government Housing
regulates land use and land tenure. Programme by extending direct loans to LGUs for
• The Urban Development and Housing Act (UDHA) land acquisition and development, including the
authorizes LGUs to enforce certain regulatory and
licensing powers pertinent to housing concerns.
1
The LHB is usually chaired by the Mayor with the Vice-Mayor as co-chair. Board members include the city council’s chair of the Committee on
Housing, the heads of planning and engineering, and representatives from HUDCC, the Presidential Commission for the Urban Poor, People’s
Organizations, NGOs and the private sector.
2
Executive Order 708 dated 26 February, 2008.
6
15. CH 2: The Legal and Institutional Framework
02
construction of housing units. Its Expanded Home 2.1.4. The private sector
Lending Programme provides financial assistance
to HDMF members through house, lot or house Private developers producing and selling social housing
and lot loans. units are becoming increasingly important actors in the
social housing sector. Their growth has been facilitated
• he Social Housing Finance Corporation (SHFC),
T by the efficiency of HDMF in providing financing to
meanwhile, administers the CMP, a financing government and private sector employees for their
scheme that allows residents of blighted areas to housing requirements. HDMF does this through its
own the lots they occupy and construct houses Pag-IBIG Fund from which members can take out
on them. The LGUs, NGOs and, in some cases, loans to buy a house built by a private developer, and
the NHA act as loan originators. SHFC’s Abot Kaya through subsidized interest rates.
Pabahay Developmental Loan Programme provides
assistance to social housing developers identified 2.2. The capacities of stakeholders
by LGUs as serving priority areas in relation to
socio-economic and housing development. The development and implementation of alternative
secure tenure approaches depends on the political
and organizational capacities of key actors who are
Private developers producing and expected to perform the various roles and activities
selling social housing units are becoming involved in these approaches.
increasingly important actors in the
social housing sector. 2.2.1. Local governments
Tenure regularization is typically not a priority
• he Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP),
T development agenda of local governments. A few
the Land Bank of the Philippines (LBP) and the local governments have initiated housing programmes
Philippine National Bank (PNB) also provide loans that provide secure tenure to the urban poor, using
for various LGU housing programmes. their own resources and approaches. Others have
organized communities to access the CMP, while
• he Government Service Insurance System (GSIS)
T others have forged partnerships with NGOs to
also funds social housing through its Mass Housing upgrade slums in communities where tenure has been
Programme, through which the LGU applies for secured. These examples indicate that, while political
a loan from GSIS-accredited banks. The GSIS will and capacity for tenure regularization are low
shoulders the LGU’s corresponding loan, after among local governments, interest is slowly growing
which loan payments are channelled through the and some local governments have gained experience
accredited banks. in this area.
7
16. PART I Analysis of Secure Tenure Practices
2.2.2. National housing agencies in the provision of individual titles in the proclaimed
areas. Finally, the NHA assists communities in
Various shelter agencies have adopted the provision accessing CMP loans. It shares this role with NGOs and
of tenure security as a major initiative; however, the local governments.
actual level of provision has been low.3 It is not clear
whether this is due to the limited resources given to The SHFC is a smaller and newer organization, with
them by the Government, or their limited capacity to the capacity to deal with smaller-sized communities
use them. and work with NGOs and local governments. It
can also undertake lending and collections, and is
Held together by a “coordinating council”, the existing attempting to localize its main programme, the CMP,
housing bureaucracy is, in many ways, less cohesive to increase local government participation. However,
than other government sectors. The HUDCC provides NGOs and communities find its processes too slow
the general policy direction for all shelter agencies and its lending requirements restrictive. It has had
and the entire government-housing programme. Still, difficulty increasing the scale of its housing loan
the housing agencies, most of which are corporations portfolio.
with their own charters, exercise a high degree of
independence because they have corporate earnings 2.2.3. Non-government organizations
and are not completely dependent on appropriations
from the national budget. They also have their own Some NGO networks like Partnership for Philippine
priorities, programmes and policies. The current set-up Support for Service Agencies (PHILSSA) and Philippine
shows how the performance of the housing sector Business for Social Progress (PBSP) have developed the
appears to depend more on the leadership of the capacity to implement slum upgrading in partnership
individual agencies than on the HUDCC. with local governments and development agencies like
the World Bank and Asian Development Bank.4 Some
The NHA’s biggest and most established role is the NGOs also exert a great deal of effort in setting up
implementation of large-scale resettlement projects partnerships among local governments, communities
but its programmes have been widely criticized for and other NGOs when undertaking tenure and
the distant location of the new housing sites, the community upgrading programmes.5
inadequacy of basic services and livelihood support
after relocation, the beneficiaries’ poor repayment There are NGOs that help organize communities
rate, and the high rate of abandonment of the in these resettlement areas in order to improve
awarded housing units. The NHA also facilitates the quality of services and secure better terms on
the disposition of lands but has faced formidable housing loans. NGOs have also formed micro-
difficulties. This is borne out by the slow progress finance institutions capable of giving loans and
3
See the paper by the Partnership of Philippine Support Service Agencies and the John J. Carroll Institute on Church and Social Issues, Civil Society
Assessment of the MTPDP (2005-2010) Performance in Housing” for a detailed analysis of the accomplishments of the different shelter agencies.
4
One example is PBSP’s STEP-UP programme, which provided technical assistance, loans and grants for home improvements, community
infrastructure and livelihood activities implemented in 42 communities in 12 cities.
5
PHILSSA’s UPSURGE established local level multi-stakeholder partnerships for housing. It acquired a grant from the British Department for
International Development, for a capacity-building programme in 14 cities.
8
17. CH 2: The Legal and Institutional Framework
02
collecting repayments for enterprise development (e.g. UDHA, Comprehensive and Integrated Shelter
and emergency needs. However, NGO experience Finance Act and the repeal of the anti-squatting law).
in lending for housing remains very limited, despite They have similarly been promoting the establishment
some NGOs having also gained some experience in of pro-poor institutions such as the SHFC and
cooperative housing. Philippine Commission for the Urban Poor (PCUP), and
the reform of resettlement and CMP policies.
A faith-based group known as Gawad Kalinga has
harnessed voluntary labour on a larger scale for house Some national urban poor coalitions have
construction. Gawad Kalinga has not only succeeded demonstrated the capacity for advocacy but have
in mobilizing financial resources from private little capacity to mobilize resources or implement
individuals and groups to support housing for the development projects for tenure regularization
poor, but has also managed to forge partnerships with and community upgrading. Different urban poor
local governments that aim to deliver secure tenure federations have developed their distinct strengths. For
and improved housing to informal settlers.6 example, there are urban poor organizations that have
gone through CMP and have some knowledge about
A noticeable trend in the work of NGOs is their land transfer transactions and loan processing, and
preference for working with local governments and can therefore assist communities in land acquisition.
setting up institutionalized mechanisms so that pilot On the other hand, some urban poor federations,
projects on housing and tenure can be replicated and for example the Homeless Peoples’ Federation of the
scaled up. While some successful institutionalization Philippines, specialize in organizing savings groups
experiences have been noted among NGOs at the among the urban poor, to help them meet basic needs
national (e.g. CMP) and local (e.g. Local Housing such as housing and secure tenure.
Boards) levels, these experiences are still limited and
have not been sufficiently replicated. Other federations, such as the Urban Land Reform
Task Force (ULRTF), are more highly skilled in policy
2.2.4. Urban poor organizations and legislative advocacy. Still others, like the Ugnayang
Lakas ng mga Apektadong Pamilya sa Baybaying Ilog
For four decades, urban poor communities have been Pasig (ULAP) or, translated, United Forces of Affected
organizing and mobilizing support for addressing Families along Pasig River, are most effective in anti-
land tenure issues. They have formed issue-based eviction work. That these federations are under an
movements and national coalitions to advance umbrella coalition known as the Urban Poor Alliance
general urban poor causes, such as fighting eviction (UP-ALL) has allowed the different groups to hone
and pushing for land tenure programmes. These their skills in different areas and has enabled the UP-
movements and coalitions have also been pushing ALL to collectively and competently engage in different
specific policy reforms, such as the passage of laws tasks and issues.
6
A typical partnership scheme has the local government providing the land and the GK building new houses for informal
settlers whom the local government wants to assist.
9
19. CH 2: The Legal and Institutional Framework
02
system (PA-LAMP, 2002) have also impeded the standards. Consequently, local authorities frequently
implementation of some anti-poverty laws (such as use the National Building Code as the legal basis for
UDHA, Comprehensive Agrarian Reform Programme demolishing unwanted, informally built residential
and the Indigenous People’s Rights Act). structures.
2.3.2. The new Free Patent Law 2.3.5. Other forms of tenure
On 9 March 2010, Congress passed Republic Act Aside from ownership, other forms of tenure for
10023, which aims to facilitate the registration of which there are laws governing their practice in the
residential lands. The law allows the issuance of a free Philippines include lease (of land or residential units),
patent requiring only 10 years of actual occupation. usufruct, and cooperative housing. Intermediate or
It covers all lands zoned as residential areas, including temporary tenure systems are not always provided for
town sites and military reservations. By virtue of this by law, but are mostly established on a programme
law, any actual occupant may apply for a free patent level or by administrative agencies. Examples of
for up to 200 square metres in highly urbanized cities, intermediate tenure instruments that confer use
up to 500 square metres in other cities, up to 750 in rights and some degree of security of tenure are
first and second class municipalities, and up to 1000 the certificates of lot awards issued by the NHA to
square metres in all other municipalities. This law beneficiary families and for units in resettlement
can facilitate poor people’s access to untitled land in projects or areas subject to presidential land
urbanizing areas. proclamations. The Department of Environment and
Natural Resources (DENR) also issues Certificate of
2.3.3. Land valuation Entitlement to a Lot Allocation (CELA) for beneficiaries
on areas subject of land proclamations.
Because secure land tenure is often equated with land
ownership, the pricing of land has become critical,
constraining poor people’s access to legal tenure. Informal dwellings are under
Not only has urbanization pushed up land values constant threat of demolition not
considerably, thereby making significant portions only because of their location but
of urban areas inaccessible to the poor, but land also because they do not conform to
valuation rules can also sometimes vary widely. building standards.
2.3.4. Restrictive building standards
2.3.6. Housing rights of informal dwellers
Informal dwellings are under constant threat of
demolition not only because of their location but The UDHA, which was signed into law in 1992 as
also because they do not conform to building Republic Act 7279, was the first legislation to formally
7
Section 2, Declaration of State Policy and Programme Objectives, RA 7279.
8
By law, eviction of a tenant is allowed only for the following reasons: 1) non-payment of rent for three months; 2) subleasing of the unit
without the express consent of the owner; 3) the landlord needs the property for personal use; and 4) the landlord needs to make repairs.
11
20. CH 2: The Legal and Institutional Framework
confer housing rights. It established as state policy Renters of informally constructed dwellings are only
the provision of “decent housing at affordable cost” secure insofar as the structures are protected from
to “underprivileged and homeless citizens”.7 It also demolition. There are usually no written contracts.
states that evictions will be allowed only in three Rental agreements in the lower segment of the rental
circumstances: market are usually verbal, although the landlord often
gives the tenant receipts for rent paid.
1) when land needs to be cleared for an infrastructure
project; The Civil Code of the Philippines (Articles 1654-1688)
provides the general guidelines governing the lease
2) when the informal dwellings are standing on of urban and rural lands. The Rent Control Act of
hazardous or “danger” areas; and 2009, on the other hand, provides for more specific
regulations on rent increases for residential units with
3) when there is a court order for the demolition. monthly rents not exceeding PHP 10,000 in Metro
Manila and PHP 5,000 elsewhere.
Aside from protecting informal settlers against Lease arrangements are legally allowed on land
inhumane eviction, the law also directs local owned by private individuals or by Government. In
governments to allocate lands to be used as social practice, there are few examples of government lands
housing sites, where informal settlers can reside under leased either to individual families or to community
legal tenure. Taken as a whole, UDHA provides for associations for housing. More common are leases for
a systematic programme for regularizing informal business or industrial use.
settlements and providing secure tenure to the urban
poor under the leadership of local governments, with There are also few examples of public rental housing.
assistance from national agencies. In these cases, the general rules contained in the Civil
Code and the specific regulations in the Rent Control
2.3.7. Forms of land and housing tenure Law would also apply.
available to the urban poor
More recently, usufruct arrangements have been
Freehold or full ownership is a form of tenure that adopted as an alternative form of tenure for the
has been acquired by former informal settlers who purpose of making legal housing more affordable
have either become beneficiaries of resettlement for the urban poor. While usufruct was, in the past,
programmes and the CMP and have paid for their primarily and customarily applied in agricultural and
housing loans in full, or they have directly bought land industrial settings, it is now being appropriated for use
from landowner through a negotiated purchase. in the residential context.
While there are laws that define the rights of renters
and regulate rent increases, renters/tenants in
informal settlements hardly have any use for them.8
8
By law, eviction of a tenant is allowed only for the following reasons: 1) non-payment of rent for three months; 2) subleasing of the unit
without the express consent of the owner; 3) the landlord needs the property for personal use; and 4) the landlord needs to make repairs.
12
22. PART II IMPLEMENTING ALTERNATIVE TENURE
APPROACHES
Chapter 3: The Community Mortgage through a community mortgage loan. One of the
Program requirements is a subdivision plan, where the houses
and plots are then re-aligned or re-blocked to conform
The community mortgage concept was first introduced to minimum subdivision standards.
and implemented in the Philippines in the mid-1980s
when a group of social reform advocates managed An off-site project, on the other hand, requires
to introduce a home lending programme that would relocation to another area that the community
specifically cater to the urban poor. chooses and purchases. Communities that are
located in danger zones and/or those affected by
Subsequently, Republic Act 7279, or UDHA, adopted infrastructure projects and court-ordered evictions
the Community Mortgage Programme (CMP) as a usually resort to off-site projects. To be eligible for
component of the National Shelter Programme to help loans, informal settlers have to have a homeowners’
legally organized associations of underprivileged and association (HOA) with at least nine households but no
homeless citizens to buy and develop land, and own more than 300 member households (recently reduced
the lots they occupy or wish to relocate to “under the to 200).
concept of community ownership.”
After an association has complied with the minimum
3.1. Features of the approach requirement and met certain criteria, the SHFC
approves the mortgage and advances payment to the
Through the CMP, the Government lends funds landowner. The group loan is payable monthly for up
to informal settlers organized as a community to 25 years at 6 per cent interest per annum. The land
association, making it possible for them to buy a piece to be purchased serves as collateral for the loan.
of land that they can occupy permanently. The land
can be on-site, presently occupied by the community, The HOA is considered to be the borrower.
or an entirely new site to where the community Throughout the process, it is responsible for preparing
intends to relocate. The CMP also offers loans for documentary requirements, negotiating with the
site improvement and house construction even if, in landowner, collecting the monthly amortizations of its
reality, the majority of CMP loans are issued for the member-beneficiaries, and ensuring that their financial
acquisition of land. obligations to the lending institution are met. The
HOA also enforces sanctions on community members,
The CMP was designed to be a demand-driven and oversees the re-blocking and enforcement of the
approach; it is the community that needs assistance subdivision plan.
that decides to participate in the programme and
initiates the process. Another feature of the CMP is the mobilization of
project “originators”, which can be non-government
In an on-site project, informal settlers can obtain organizations, local governments or key shelter
ownership of the land they occupy by buying it agencies such as the NHA. The originator assists with
14
23. CH 3: The Community Mortgage Program
03
organizing the community and the evaluation of the community set up an effective collection system and
eligibility of each member-beneficiary. It also helps the oversees the collection of payments. In 2009, there
HOA comply with the documentary requirements of were over 200 accredited originators.
the programme. In addition, the originator helps the
Box 1: Stages in acquiring a CMP loan
1. The community takes the following steps:
a. Registers itself as a HOA with the appropriate government agency.
b. Secures from the landowner a voluntary agreement or intent to sell.
c. Submits loan documents and a lease purchase agreement signed by the HOA and individual
member-beneficiaries. The HOA should engage the services of a loan
originator, which can be an NGO, a local government unit, or the National Housing Authority.
2. Issuance of the Purchase Commitment Line (PCL). During this stage, both the project and originator
are accredited by the SHFC. The Government assigns a “line” or allocates an amount for the project
based on the selling price of the property and/or the cost of site development. Both the appraised value
of the property and the borrowers’ capacity to pay are considered when determining the PCL. If the
selling price exceeds the PCL, the HOA is required to put up equity equivalent to the balance.
3. Approval of the Letter of Guaranty (LOG). By issuing the LOG, SHFC guarantees payment of the
property to the owner once the latter transfers the title to the organization. The SHFC board approves the
LOG after the loan and mortgage have been examined and the requirements fulfilled.
4. Loan take-out. With the release of the loan, the SHFC pays the landowner for the land while the
HOA members start paying their amortization to SHFC after a month.
5. Post take-out. The HOA collects the monthly amortizations of its members and keeps individual
records of paid and unpaid amortizations.
As long as the community title to the property remains with the association any default in payment by a
member is a liability of the entire association. In cases where a defaulting member can no longer service
his/her loan, the HOA finds a qualified substitute borrower who assumes the rights and obligations of the
defaulting member. If pursued, the conversion of the community title to individual parcels assigned to
individual members and the transfer of the title to the name of each member are done at this stage. The
community loan is then individualized.
15
25. CH 3: The Community Mortgage Program
03
needs. In 2007, more than half of its 40,628 urban these projects (involving 59 HOAs that had 5,608
poor households (56.3 per cent) occupied private households) had been taken-out or completed, while
lands, while the rest were on land owned by the local the remainder were at the priming stage or were
government or by national government agencies. under process.
In 1995, the city government created the UPAO. In
2008, the Housing and Estate Development Board The UPAO provides technical and organizing assistance
was set up to manage policies for housing projects to informal settlers under CMP, while origination
and programmes, and estate management and urban activities are delegated to accredited NGOs. The local
development. The UPAO was the main coordinating government manages the construction of amenities,
body. such as roads and drainage. The city government
has also negotiated on behalf of the informal settlers
The city organized informal settlers into bona fide for benefits from other government agencies by
organizations which were required to register with endorsing requests for transfer tax or capital gains tax
the Securities and Exchange Commission and/or the exemptions, and amnesty in cases of tax deficiency.
Bureau of Internal Revenue and were offered different
land acquisition schemes. To address the informal settlers’ financing needs, the
By December 2007, a total of 26,926 households, or city passed the Municipal Ordinance 303-96, which
66 per cent, of the city’s informal settler population appropriated PHP 5 million as a revolving fund to
had been given security of tenure through the city’s finance land acquisitions.
land acquisition schemes. Sixty-five per cent of
Box 2: Local government uses CMP for tenure regularization of slum
communities
One of the communities in Las Piñas that accessed a CMP loan was the Sunshine Ville HOA in Barangay
Talon Dos, a property covering 6,000-square metres beside a high-end subdivision. Most of its
beneficiaries were factory workers, drivers and laundrywomen.
In 2000, a person named Gorospe wanted to subdivide the property, which prompted the community to
approach the UPAO. UPAO suggested that the community reactivate its association, which was eventually
named La Suerte Neighbourhood Association. In 2001, another claimant, Smithville Finance Corporation,
presented a land title and sued the community association for engaging with Gorospe. The UPAO helped
the community association negotiate the price of the land at PHP 3,000 per square metre.
The UPAO introduced the CMP to the community and found an NGO originator for it - the Foundation for
Development Alternatives. The PCL was released in 2002. Re-blocking was conducted in 2003 and, with the
help of another NGO, Gawad Kalinga, houses were built for 89 families. UPAO managed site development
and hired community members as construction workers. The loan was “taken-out” in early 2009.
The HOA president attributed the success of the project to the support of the UPAO, which had made it
easier for the association members to comply with the requirements.
17
27. CH 3: The Community Mortgage Program
03
3.5. The benefits and limitations of the Numerous and difficult requirements: A
tenure approach community organization applying for a CMP loan
has to comply with very stringent documentary and
3.5.1. Benefits organizational requirements that are not easy to meet
without the help of an originator. Long processing
In-city housing: CMP allowed informal settlers to times have delayed payments to landowners,
remain in areas near their employment and essential prompting some of them to withdraw their offer to
urban services. sell the property to the community association. These
delays also sometimes disillusion some community
Better access to services: Once a community had members and cause financial problems for the
acquired, or was in the process of acquiring, full originators.
security of tenure, other aspects of housing were
improved, such as drainage systems, access roads,
legal power connections and water supply. Free from
the threat of eviction, people in a CMP project could
upgrade their structures incrementally.
Affordable security of tenure: The guarantee
of full ownership granted at the loan take-out
stage encouraged the community association to be
committed to keeping their home lots and paying
their amortizations, thus the high repayment rates
under CMP. The programme also allowed monthly
amortizations that were affordable for very poor
households.
3.5.2. Limitations
Limited scope: It only prioritized informal settler
families occupying private lands, whose owners were
identifiable and willing to sell the land at a price within
the loan ceiling of CMP and which the members of
the community could afford. In highly urbanized areas
such as Metro Manila, it is a huge disincentive for
landowners to sell their land below market prices to
unauthorized occupants.
19
28. PART II IMPLEMENTING ALTERNATIVE TENURE
APPROACHES
Chapter 4: Presidential Proclamation • A survey is done to determine, among other
things, residents’ income and capacity to pay.
The disposition of government-owned lands to • Policies and guidelines for beneficiary selection and
their informal settler occupants through a land awarding are issued.
proclamation is an established policy and practice for • An occupancy verification survey is done to
providing secure tenure. A Presidential Proclamation ascertain if the present occupants are on the
normally involves government-owned land that is master list or were in the census. This serves as the
declared available for disposition to families occupying basis for a certificate of lot allocation.
the subject property, informal settlers residing in • Survey works done either by the land or project
other areas, and employees of government agencies administrator, or by the community association,
or local government units. But some presidential which produces a technical description of each plot
proclamations involve privately-owned lands which the to be awarded.
national government acquires through expropriation • A notice of award is issued specifying the name
or simple negotiated purchase and then disposes to of the beneficiary and the technical description of
the intended beneficiaries. the home plot to be awarded.
• A contract to sell is issued specifying the price of
4.1. Features of the approach the home plot awarded and the terms of
payment, including the interest rate and the period
There is a set of “pre-proclamation” guidelines issued of amortization.
by the HUDCC. • A deed of sale is signed between the beneficiary
household and the landowner (a government
HUDCC compiles the requisite documents for agency), upon full payment of the land by the
submission to the Office of the President. beneficiary.
• A land title is issued in favour of the beneficiary
A land proclamation usually takes the form of an after the necessary taxes are paid, or after tax
Executive Order issued by the President. After the exemptions are obtained.
proclamation is issued, the disposition of the land can
be initiated by a Local Inter-Agency Committee (LIAC) 4.2. Application of the approach in
whose membership, responsibilities and institutional two cases
arrangements are usually spelled out in the Executive
Order. In cases where these are not specified, the 4.2.1. Baseco: Reclaiming the right to shelter
post-proclamation guidelines provide a generic set of on reclaimed land
arrangements to be followed. Typical steps involved in
the land disposition process are: The Baseco Compound on public land at the mouth
of the Pasig River, north of Manila, contained an
• A census is done to determine the identities and urban poor community of 10,000 families (Moraleda,
the number of the actual residents/occupants 2009). In 2001, when an ADB-assisted project was
in the proclaimed site which becomes the basis initiated for the rehabilitation of the Pasig River and
of a master list of qualified beneficiaries of the the development of the areas along it, the 52-hectare
proclamation. property was among those declared a priority “urban
20
30. PART II IMPLEMENTING ALTERNATIVE TENURE
APPROACHES
Box 3: Community organizations help collect useful information and
protect the rights of disadvantaged members
Kabalikat undertook a socio-economic survey of 4,419 families in the area and the information was used
for a proposed community development plan. The plan noted people’s preferred housing designs, needs
for livelihood and their capacity to pay.
Between 2001 and 2004, three serious fires broke out in the informal settlement.12 Some residents
suspected they were deliberately set to remove some families from the list of qualified beneficiaries of the
land proclamation. However, there were no formal complaints or investigations. After each fire, community
members had to fight the authorities to be allowed to return to their former homes. Fortunately, Kabalikat’s
2001 community survey could be used to determine which families should be allowed to return. People
had to constantly assert their right to return to their former home sites and their eligibility for lot awards.
As a result of Kabalikat’s efforts, some 700 homeowners were the first to be awarded lots and renters and
sharers were eventually given lots in a new site within the area.
In 2008, LIAC was replaced by a project inter-agency formal procedures were more or less established
committee (PIAC) constituted by Kabalikat and other by the general guidelines issued by HUDCC. The
community organizations, which had then been technical issues on qualifying beneficiaries and soil
working on the formulation for implementing the rules characteristics could be resolved, but the existence of
and regulations of Presidential Proclamation 145.13 a climate of distrust and different political agendas
muddled the land disposition process. The institutional
The Baseco case demonstrated that the most critical arrangement of the LIAC was unable to resolve
issues were political and institutional. The legal basis the divergent agendas of the city government, the
of the proclamation was clear and uncontested; the national government and the community.
12
The fires occurred in March 2001, March 2002 and January 2004. There was a fourth fire in January 2010.
13
Other members of the PIAC included the City of Manila, the HUDCC, the NHA, the DENRand the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH).
22
31. CH 4: Presidential Proclamation
04
Box 4: Issues that can hamper the disposition of “proclaimed land”
In the example of the presidential land proclamation in Baseco, three issues were critical for tenure
regularization to proceed:
1) the determination of the qualified beneficiaries;
2) the suitability of the site for residential use; and
3) the securing of an agreement among the key stakeholders and authorities on the allocation of land uses
within the proclaimed area.
While the community organization wanted to include sharers and renters among the qualified
beneficiaries, the Government proposed giving priority to homeowners, but no assurance that renters
and sharers would be awarded lots. Ultimately, however, the post-proclamation guidelines issued by the
HUDCC did not discriminate between structure owners and renters. The eligibility criteria included only
those stated in the UDHA, namely that the beneficiary:
1) is a Filipino citizen;
2) is an underprivileged or homeless person;
3) does not own any real property in a rural or urban area; and
4) is not a professional squatter or member of a squatting syndicate.
The suitability of the site for residential use became an issue because the subject property stood on
improperly reclaimed land. Other major issues were the cost of the soil rectification procedure, whether
the people would have to pay for this, and which agency would bear the cost.
The third critical issue that delayed the disposition of the land was the failure of the different stakeholders
to agree on the actual size and location of the socialized housing site. This would not have been an issue if
the actual proclamation had been definitive and explicit.
23